The Journal Star reports that “The Civic Center Authority on Thursday approved an approximately $8 million 2010 fiscal year budget that calls for across-the-board 2 percent wage increases” (emphasis added).
So, let me see if I have this straight: The fire fighters won’t get a raise. And the library staff won’t get a raise. And exempt city staff won’t get raises. And the city is asking the police department to give up their raises. But the Civic Center, which didn’t even pass a balanced budget (“The budget’s approval includes a $115,000 operating budget deficit”) is going to give raises to their workers?
But wait — it gets better:
At-large City Councilman Ryan Spain informed authority members that governmental bargaining unions throughout the city are being asked to forgo pay raises next year in order to help deficit-laden organizations patch their budgets…. Commissioners requested the Civic Center’s management firm, SMG Corp., consult with the finance committee about reviewing the possibility [emphasis added] of freezing the wage increases. Commissioner Ken Goldin requested the review be taken after Spain made his comments.
“We are not saying the raises are not coming,” Goldin said. “We want to think about it and review them.”
A couple of things bother me about this. First of all, they don’t know about the city’s budget issues until Ryan Spain tells them? These guys are really on top of things. I wonder if they’ve heard yet that Michael Jackson is dead.
Secondly, they’re going to think about freezing wages? You know, back on August 11, the city council had a motion on the floor to renegotiate the city’s intergovernmental agreement with the Civic Center — that is, to redirect part of the HRA tax revenue from the Civic Center to the City’s general fund. Ryan Spain made a substitute motion “to engage Civic Center Authority in further discussion over the next four weeks” as the council’s liaison. My guess is, if Spain is unsuccessful in getting concessions from the Civic Center Authority through the softball approach, the original motion may make a reappearance at a future council meeting.
Also, as an aside:
“This is the only area I see a concern in the budget,” said Spain, the City Council’s liaison to the Civic Center Authority.
Really? The $115,000 operating budget deficit wasn’t an area of concern? You’d think after 27 years, there might be some concern over the fact that the Civic Center is still losing money.